How Overqualification Impacts Job Attitudes and Well-Being: The Unique Roles of Perceptions and Reality

The recent global economic downturn has stimulated a growing interest among scholars in how employees interpret and respond to the circumstance of being overqualified. However, the overqualification literature has been hindered by uncertainty regarding the extent to which employees’ perceptions of b...

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Main Author: Arvan, Marijana L.
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5903
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7099&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-70992018-03-13T05:12:18Z How Overqualification Impacts Job Attitudes and Well-Being: The Unique Roles of Perceptions and Reality Arvan, Marijana L. The recent global economic downturn has stimulated a growing interest among scholars in how employees interpret and respond to the circumstance of being overqualified. However, the overqualification literature has been hindered by uncertainty regarding the extent to which employees’ perceptions of being overqualified are based in reality. The present study sought to address this concern by proposing and testing a theoretical model of objective overqualification, perceived overqualification, job satisfaction, and well-being using a cross-sectional sample of full-time employees who had recently graduated from college. Additionally, the present study investigated cognitive ability, achievement striving, and trait negative affectivity as potential moderators of several relationships delineated in the proposed model. Results indicated that the data were consistent with the proposed model, which argues that objective overqualification predicts employees’ perceptions of being overqualified, which creates feelings of relative deprivation and ultimately manifests in poorer job satisfaction and reduced well-being. Importantly, however, the pattern of relationships among study variables suggested that strain outcomes were mostly driven by perceived overqualification. Furthermore, employees’ perceptions of being overqualified appeared to be influenced considerably by unmeasured factors besides objective overqualification, potentially including dissatisfaction with other aspects of the job. There was no support for the hypothesized individual moderators. Overall, the study highlights the importance of taking a more nuanced approach to studying overqualification phenomena and cautions against the assumption that being objectively overqualified is a necessarily undesirable circumstance for individuals and their employers. 2015-10-23T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5903 http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7099&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons person-job fit job stress relative deprivation objective overqualification perceived overqualification Other Psychology Psychology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic person-job fit
job stress
relative deprivation
objective overqualification
perceived overqualification
Other Psychology
Psychology
spellingShingle person-job fit
job stress
relative deprivation
objective overqualification
perceived overqualification
Other Psychology
Psychology
Arvan, Marijana L.
How Overqualification Impacts Job Attitudes and Well-Being: The Unique Roles of Perceptions and Reality
description The recent global economic downturn has stimulated a growing interest among scholars in how employees interpret and respond to the circumstance of being overqualified. However, the overqualification literature has been hindered by uncertainty regarding the extent to which employees’ perceptions of being overqualified are based in reality. The present study sought to address this concern by proposing and testing a theoretical model of objective overqualification, perceived overqualification, job satisfaction, and well-being using a cross-sectional sample of full-time employees who had recently graduated from college. Additionally, the present study investigated cognitive ability, achievement striving, and trait negative affectivity as potential moderators of several relationships delineated in the proposed model. Results indicated that the data were consistent with the proposed model, which argues that objective overqualification predicts employees’ perceptions of being overqualified, which creates feelings of relative deprivation and ultimately manifests in poorer job satisfaction and reduced well-being. Importantly, however, the pattern of relationships among study variables suggested that strain outcomes were mostly driven by perceived overqualification. Furthermore, employees’ perceptions of being overqualified appeared to be influenced considerably by unmeasured factors besides objective overqualification, potentially including dissatisfaction with other aspects of the job. There was no support for the hypothesized individual moderators. Overall, the study highlights the importance of taking a more nuanced approach to studying overqualification phenomena and cautions against the assumption that being objectively overqualified is a necessarily undesirable circumstance for individuals and their employers.
author Arvan, Marijana L.
author_facet Arvan, Marijana L.
author_sort Arvan, Marijana L.
title How Overqualification Impacts Job Attitudes and Well-Being: The Unique Roles of Perceptions and Reality
title_short How Overqualification Impacts Job Attitudes and Well-Being: The Unique Roles of Perceptions and Reality
title_full How Overqualification Impacts Job Attitudes and Well-Being: The Unique Roles of Perceptions and Reality
title_fullStr How Overqualification Impacts Job Attitudes and Well-Being: The Unique Roles of Perceptions and Reality
title_full_unstemmed How Overqualification Impacts Job Attitudes and Well-Being: The Unique Roles of Perceptions and Reality
title_sort how overqualification impacts job attitudes and well-being: the unique roles of perceptions and reality
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2015
url http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5903
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7099&context=etd
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